I believe it was either a GCSE or A-level art project, around that time anyway...I had chosen the title 'TWISTED' to work on. Art, along with design and English, had always been my better subjects and I was pretty used to the school's curriculum of 'pick a title, research artists, produce work in their style, talk about why you like/dislike their work, develop your own piece, produce the final piece, more write up, more development, more research...you get the gist'. I won't lie, I had done incredibly well on my previous work and perhaps got a little cocky about this one. The final piece did not come out the way I pictured it in my head...it was a mess.
But other than that lesson in pride, I had also learned about the magic of glass. If you know Dale Chihuly's work, I'm sure you can see how he made his way to be one of the artists I researched for this 'TWISTED' title. If you haven't, google him right away! Glass never crossed my mind, I had certainly never worked with it, but once I took a look at Chihuly's beautiful glass works I knew it took definite skill, talent and heat to create something simple - let alone the grand sculptures Chihuly and his team create!
That's bascially the story of how I came across his work, how I fell in love with his work and how he's one of my favourite artists to this day. After coming to university in London, I had the chance to finally visit the Victoria And Albert Museum to see the piece that ignited this love afair - the jaw-dropping mass of blue, yellow, green swirls hanging above the entrance of the museum. I'm not sure how long I stood there gazing...On paper, his work was always beautiful to me, almost mesmerizing. In person, mesmerizing was just the start. His 'chandelier' was overwhelming. I'm still not sure what it is about this work that draws me in, but I've definitely not encountered other pieces that re-create the same feeling.
February of last year, there was a quaint exhibition of his work, 'Beyond The Object' - I had to go! And I didn't regret a thing. I'm still patiently waiting for another exhibition, but until then, the V&A will be enough to keep me satisfied.
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